BEATLES sgt peppers band vinyl LP. original press. Vg++ 1967 Capital records The Beatles Sgt. Pepper's 1967 LP Vinyl Original SMAS 2653 Complete. Opens in a newPressing Plant ID (Capitol Records Pressing Plant, Winchester): — Matrix / Runout (Variant 7 Side A Runout Stamped & etched): SMAS-1-2653 F36 MASTERED BY CAPITOL ─ Matrix / Runout (Variant 7 Side B Runout Stamped & etched): SMAS-1-2653 F44 #2 MASTERED BY CAPITOL ─
Here is a rare opportunity to acquire the greatest sounding pressing of this album ever made. If you are an audiophile you will know the quality of the Nimbus supercut range, for those of you who don't know what all the fuss is about:-. Just 1,000 copies of this edition were pressed by specialist UK audiophile label 'Nimbus' in 1984 and wwas
With vinyl’s comeback seemingly here to stay, the cost of the world’s rarest vinyl just keeps skyrocketing. The more popular the artist, the heftier the price tag, and first pressings of classic albums by The Beatles, Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd now sell for astronomical prices; if there’s a controversial album cover, or the pressing is limited to minute quantities, that can make it evenThe Beatles. (1968) Magical Mystery Tour is a record by the English rock band the Beatles that was released as a double EP in the United Kingdom and an LP in the United States. It includes the soundtrack to the 1967 television film of the same name. The EP was issued in the UK on 8 December 1967 on the Parlophone label, while the Capitol View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1973 Vinyl release of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" on Discogs.
Late 70s/early 80s Philippines pressing, black Parlophone label with all-yellow Parlophone logo & text characters - unique to the Philippines. LABEL/DISC NOTES: -The PARI stamp and Stereo 33 1/3 RPM are at the top in white, split on either side of the Parlophone £on both labels.
-B5 shown as "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - Reprise" on the label (i.e., no parenthesis).-Does not have NEMS or Maclen Music credits on the back, lower right corner. Capitol Records Pressing Plant, Scranton, pressing, denoted by "IAM" in a triangle stamped in runouts. Remainder of runouts etched. First catalog # (MAS 2653) on the back
Hallo to everybody! I've just taken a research that I started a few months ago about the first UK press of the famous Beatles album "Sgt. Pepper"; really, I think that about the matrix numbers of this vinyl there is a little mystery: we well know that a trail-off as following: YEX 637-1 1 H does mean that we have a stereo first press stamped starting from the first lacquer, from the first
I have a copy of Sgt Pepper in mono that I bought on Discogs for a tenner. When it arrived to my suprise it was a wide spine first press YEX-637-1 /YEX-638-1. I checked the stamping and have found: A Side Mother 1 Stamper TD = 90 B Side Mother 1 Stamper GO= 15 Would this be considered an early first press ?
I see that my Aussie Sgt Peppers is a first pressing stereo, with the halftone red "psychedelic" inner sleeve, insert, "Garrod and Lofthouse Ltd. Patents pending", and "Stereo" label stuck in the right hand corner. The pressing is Aussie but has the matrix numbers: Side 1: YEX 637-1; Side 2: YEX 638-1.
Hyba.